2009年4月24日星期五

FINAL ANALYSIS!!! WOW~~~=]

Here are the summary about factors affecting Riccardo Tisci when he was creating the collection.

Therefore, I classified the above factors into:

  1. Cultural factors: Parisian chic, American West, Gaucho, Mob, Bondage, Rock, French look, Gothic, Surrealism, Romantic
  2. Religious factors: Catholic
  3. Social factors: War (Navy/Warrior women), Military
  4. Ethnic factors: Ethnic geometries, Tribalism, Multiple ethnic elements (Bosnia, India, Africa, and Indonesia)
  5. Travel Experience: South America, America, Mexico, Spain, Paris, France
  6. Designers/Artists: Elsa Schiaparelli, Matthew Barney
  7. Muse: Mariacarla Boscono
  8. Others: Animal sensuality

Apart from the external factors that might affect Riccardo Tisci on his collection, the internal factors, which were the Personality of Tisci also played an important role!!!

  1. Love romanticism and sensuality
  2. Emotional
  3. Like black and white
  4. Aristocratic, but with craziness
  5. Like beautiful things
  6. Melancholic
  7. Do not like printing
  8. Like black leather and matte texture

By studying all those factors and past collections, I forecasted that Riccardo Tisci would use GOTHIC, with ROMANTIC ELEMENTS and CATHOLIC STYLE.

Therefore, here is my colour forecasting to Givenchy 10/11 Summer/Spring Ready-to-wear:

Colour Scheme:


Like his before collection, I forcast Tisci would keep using COMPLEMENTARY COLOUR SCHEME in his collection.
To represent the romantic elements, I think Tisci would use shocking pink to highlight this feeling~
This is the Colour Family:
Like what I said before, Tisci told that he loves Black and White so much, so these two colour definitely would appear in his next collection. Plus the shocking pink, by analysing the colour family that he might use, light green would be his choice. Not only because of the colour scheme he would follow, but also because of the growing influence of people's environmental conscious.

Useful Fashion Websites 2

http://www.millionlooks.com/
http://blogs.glam.com/glamchic/
http://www.trendnista.com/
http://fashioncopious.typepad.com/fashioncopious/
http://www.shinystyle.tv/
http://itsfashionhoney.blogspot.com/
http://missatlaplaya.blogspot.com/

Riccardo Tisci and his MUSE

Why Mariacarla Boscono could become the Muse of Riccardo Tisci?
I was wondering................................

What influence Ricardo Tisci? -> Elsa Schiaparelli (part 2)

Elsa Schiaparelli - Designed clothing
'The Skeleton Dress', Elsa Schiaparelli, 1938. Museum no. T.394-1974.
An Elsa Schiaparelli "Skeleton" dress. Ms. Schiaparelli frequently collaborated with Salvador Dali, Man Ray, Magritte, Alberto Giacometti and Jean Cocteau. This dress would sell in Luba's Coin du Vintage for thousands.
"At Luba there are no stains, no shiny patches. No pulled threads or split seams. Everything hangs in privileged perfection on a padded ecru peau-de-soie hanger." pp.37, To My Dearest Friends.
1938–39
Elsa Schiaparelli (French, born Italy, 1890–1973)
Wool


Cape Apollon de Versailles, 1938. Elsa Schiaparelli. Collection The Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum, New York.
"The collars of this tailored coat by Schiaparelli are held together with a large button. Schiaparelli often used novelty buttons in the shape of swinging acrobats, beetles and womens faces."
1.PAUL POIRET (1879-1944)Paul Poiret (1879-1944) “I had fallen in love with this dress years before when I saw it in a textbook. Poiret is the father of modern fashion, and this was his signature piece.”
2. ELSA SCHIAPARELLI (1890-1973)“Elsa was very good friends with Salvador Dali and Jean Cocteau. Cocteau made this witty drawing that was translated onto the dress by the embroidery firm Lesage.” 3. CHARLES JAMES(1906-1978)“James's mother came from a prominent Chicago Family, and he began his career as a milliner on State Street. This gown is maed of 25 yards of peau de soie and nylon netting.”
4. YVES SAINT LAURENT for Christian Dior (1936-2008)“This dress is such a departure from everything Christian Dior did. It’s a precursor for the youth quake that happened in the 1960s.”


Evening jacket
1938Elsa Schiaparelli (French, born Italy, 1890–1973)
Deep magenta rayon crepe embroidered with metallic thread and polychrome sequins with plastic insect buttons.

Dinner Suit
1937–1938 Elsa Schiaparelli
Green silk crepe and green silk velvet embroidered with metallic thread and red and pink rhinestones with half dome shaped plastic buttons inset with flowers.

Schiaparelli's dinner jackets changed the outline of women's fashion from soft to hard, from feminine to masculine during the mid- to late 1930s. The basic silhouette, which comprised wide shoulders and a narrow waist, first appeared in her autumn/winter 1931–32 collection entitled "Wooden Soldiers," which was inspired by the Indo-Chinese costumes featured in the 1931 Exposition Coloniale in Paris.

The extended shoulders, achieved through padding, became hugely influential in Hollywood, helped along by international café society darlings like Lady Mendl (Elsie de Wolfe), Mrs. Reginald (Daisy) Fellowes, and the Duchess of Windsor.


During a trip to America, Schiaparelli commented, "In Hollywood, one special item of popularity had preceded me—that of the padded shoulders. I had started them to give women a slimmer waist. They proved the Mecca of the manufacturers. Joan Crawford had adopted them and molded her silhouette on them for years to come. They became emphasized and monstrous. Adrian took them up with overwhelming enthusiasm."

What influence Ricardo Tisci? -> Elsa Schiaparelli (part 1)

Elsa Schiaparelli ->Biography


Elsa Schiaparelli belongs to one of the greatest designers of the 20th century. Her fantastic clothes are still admired today. She was born in Italy (Rome) in 1890. Childhood of Elsa was as bright as she was and sometimes she made her parents’ heads go round. It was a shock when Elsa came to a ball in Paris with material just around her body (it was her vision of a dress), everybody was even more shocked when it started to unravel.

When got married when she was only 18-year-old, she gave birth to a baby and afterwards her husband left her. So, she returned to Paris with a young child. In 1928 Elsa had some luck. She created a black sweater with a white bow at the neck and it was shown in the French VOGUE. This time Schiaparelli was shocked, so she hired a group of Armenian women to knit them.

That is how her business started. She rented a small room and started designing apparel for Golf, tennis, and other kinds of sport. Since that time her things were welcomed and often guests in VOGUE. Schiaparelli took her inspiration in Surrealism. In 1934 was opened her first shop in London.

In her biography, "Shocking Life", Schiaparelli tells of her delight in designing clothing that transformed the ordinary women, as the internationally recognized ones, into notable beauties.

I love it: Vintage Look


How can she found so many vintage clothes? The clothes are so match on this lovely girl!!!!
It makes me want to go shopping now!!!!
There are still many vintage things in her blog, click this if you are interested in vintage~~ =]

Q&A about Riccardo Tisci in the New York Time

Sources from The New York Time:http://runway.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/02/28/the-q-a-riccardo-tisci/ in February 28, 2007

Givenchy has seen designers come and go: John Galliano, Alexander McQueen, Julien Macdonald. Right from his first couture collection, two years ago, Riccardo Tisci seemed to connect with young women. They got his modern romance. But did editors? So often his shows are a tangled mess of mood and ideas. Still, young women manage to see his substantial gifts. How does a talented designer reconcile this divide in perception?Between fittings for his fourth ready-to-wear collection, tonight, Tisci talked about the unique problem of being Riccardo.
Q. Are you aware that editors don’t entirely grasp your work?

A. Yes, I do have that impression. When I arrived at Givenchy, I was a guy from nowhere. And Givenchy was kind of confused. Nobody knew what it meant anymore. I think now the press is beginning to understand what I’m doing. My way of showing is very melancholic. People call me a Gothic designerI don’t think I am. I love romanticism and sensuality, maybe because I come from a family with eight sisters. I’m also a person who is very emotional. I like black, I like white. I never like what’s in the middle. And the runway is where I try to transmit this.

Q. Do you think Givenchy is on the verge of a breakthrough?

A. It’s interesting that you ask me this now, because things are going very well. Touch wood! In the last year we have developed the image and the identity of the house. I’m writing my code for Givenchy without destroying its history. Givenchy was aristocratic, because Mr. Givenchy always dressed aristocratic people — but it was aristocratic with craziness.

Q. Were you frustrated that the press didn’t appreciate your clothes as quickly as women? Queen Rania of Jordan is a big fan.

A. Queen Rania has commissioned some beautiful things. And Cate Blanchett has worn Givenchy two times, in Berlin and in Los Angeles. Yes, I was aware that there was a difference, but I’m not a negative person. I figured it was my way of presenting, and I don’t want to change that. I don’t like girls walking up and down on the runway. I’m also working more with the commercial side. When you have an amazing show and then go to the shop and don’t see the things you showed, that’s so depressing. It’s also why people don’t get me. Last season, we had a big commercial success.

Q. How were sales for the January couture collection?

A. When I arrived we had five customers. Now we have 29.

Q. It must be a great affirmation to see young women, strangers, in your clothes?

A. I was in Cannes last year for the film festival and I saw this Russian girl, very beautiful, 23 years old. It was amazing to see her in my dress — a green dress from the last show, with the shoes and the bag and everything. It’s like the Arabic countries. Some of the princes have, like, 10 daughters, and they all dress in couture. It’s funny, they all come.

Q. Does Carine Roitfeld [the editor of French Vogue] help you with your shows?

A. No. Carine is a good friend. At the beginning, I was super shy. And Carine was very sweet to me. She treated me like a mother. She would come the day before the show and tell me what she thought. No, she doesn’t style my shows. I know there are rumors but there’s always a lot of talk in this business.

Q. It’s strange, though, how young women grasp the work of a virtually unknown designer — without magazine hype. How do you explain that?

A. In a way the fashion world is a little contaminated with information and trends and stars. But these girls, they are pure. They see the garment and they feel an emotion. To me, fashion is more and more about that. It’s not about shocking. It’s about what you want to wear. And these girls want sensuous, not shocking.

2009年4月23日星期四

Givenchy 09 SS Advertisments

People regarded these as the new Givenchy rocky gang: Ana Claudia Michels, Lakshmi Menon, Lara Stone and Mariacarla Boscono.

I think they really work out their atitudes and show the outfit's characters to the viewers through the advertisement.

Once again, Tisci used Achomatic colour scheme to represent the theme of his collection. A little bit gothic style, with catholic elements, all these were shown by using Black and White photos.

Givenchy 08 Fall Advertisement





In this 08 Fall advertisement, Tisci changed back to use achomatic colour scheme to present his collections.

He used Lara Stone, Maria Carla Boscono, Lakshmi Menon, Natasha Poly, and Kristen Owen as his model. “I chose these five women that represent elegance, femininity and masculinity with character,” says Givenchy’s creative director Tisci..

The campaign is black and white to represent Givenchy's colors. Seeing as I'm intrigued by models, I love the power they're given in these ads. Yes, the point is to sell the clothes, but it's cool how Tisci placed such prominence on his muses.

Riccardo said he chose these women because they embody urban fierce elegance, a bold but feminine look suited for both the young and mature. The black-on-white pictures highlight the best of the fall 2008 Givenchy line: the goth-romantic ruffled blouse,s the leather jackets, strict cut blazers and, of course, the metallic chain necklaces.

Photographers: Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin.

Givenchy 08 SS Advertisement

This year advertisement campaign was quite different than before practises. Tisci applied COMPLEMENTARY Colour Scheme in these ads campign, which was the same colour scheme he had been used in his collection.

The spring 2008 ad campaign for Givenchy ready-to-wear line uses a baroque setting, lots of mirrors and the a blonde and a brunette. Riccardo Tisci's pal, Mariacarla Boscono, and it-model of the moment, Lara Stone, sport the spring/summer 2008 rtw collection's highlights: the knee-high gladiator sandals, metallic eyelet inserts adorning leather jackets and chiffon tops and the quirky bubble dress with oversize polka dot print.

Givenchy Autumn(Fall)/Winter 2009/2010 Womens Shoes, Bags & Accessories

Gloves:

Shoes:


Belts:
Handbags/Tole bags:














Scarf?!:

Necklace:
Bracelet:


Hats: